The Day

Former Olympic swimmer Clara Walker

R.I. native set hundreds of masters records in multiple age groups

- By MARK PRATT

Clara Lamore Walker, who swam for the U.S. at the 1948 Olympic Games in London, won three national championsh­ips, and later in life set hundreds of national and world swimming records in several masters age groups, has died.

Walker died Friday of natural causes at an assisted living facility in North Smithfield, R.I., according to her greatniece, Alyssa Kent. She was 94.

She participat­ed in the 200-meter breaststro­ke in the Olympics when she was 22 years old, but swore after her last heat that she was giving up competitiv­e swimming for good, according to her biography on the Internatio­nal Swimming Hall of Fame website.

She started a job, joined a cloistered religious order, became one of the first women to graduate from Providence College, worked as an English teacher and guidance counselor in the Cranston schools, and got married. She didn’t start swimming again until she was 54 after her doctor recommende­d it to relieve back pain.

She set a national record in the 50-yard breaststro­ke in the 50-54 age group in her first meet, which inspired her to start training again.

In total, she set 184 world records and 468 national records as a masters swimmer, according to the website.

She never had children of her own, but doted on her nieces and nephews and her great-nieces and great-nephews.

“She always treated us like we were her own children and grandchild­ren,” Kent said. “She was a great role model.”

She taught all her great-nieces and great-nephews how to swim, and all become accomplish­ed swimmers in their own right, Kent said — some even competed in the Junior Olympics.

Her naval officer husband, Doneal Walker, died in the 1970s, Kent said.

Born in Providence in 1926, Walker was inducted into the Internatio­nal Swimming Hall of Fame in 1995 and the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame in 1968.

Funeral arrangemen­ts are pending.

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